12/4/2006 11:57:32 AM
12/4/2006 4:45:55 PM
I understand it, but you are unwilling to understand the concept of market power beyond the "one-firm" level.
12/4/2006 4:51:09 PM
what would happen if the president went on lou dobbs?
12/4/2006 6:12:10 PM
^^ Kris, read my stuff. I perfectly understand competition in small numbers, check out my simplistic math example above, 5 equal-sized firms clearly act differently from an infinite number of equal sized firms. But 10,000 or 100 firms act more similarly to perfect competition than they do to a monopoly. That's why I keep using the words "intolerably uncompetitive", no market will ever have an infinite number of firms, but 10 equal sized firms are close enough to be tolerable. Fuck, in my mind a free-market monopoly (just 1 firm) is tolerable because breaking it up does irrevocable harm to the social fabric by altering the incentives to be efficient (look back a month or so to another one of our three page back and forths).[Edited on December 4, 2006 at 10:48 PM. Reason : .,.]
12/4/2006 10:47:15 PM
12/4/2006 11:10:54 PM
And you have no reasons but speculation to believe investors do not take all aspects of a market into account. Of course, I've got evidence on my side, General Electric in the early 1950's would not be the only case where a company propped up their competitors in order to avoid potential future anti-trust litigation. Instead, the U.S. government charged them with collusion and cartelization and put the CEO in jail for awhile. Well, GE stopped price fixing, released a backlog of new products, and its competitors promptly lost market-share. Of course, this prompted accusations of predatory pricing and GE was punished through anti-trust litigation, as it had feared earlier. It was all for naught, of course, because thanks to trade liberalization GE soon faced competitors on all fronts from overseas. Prompting me to say: it appears not once in history has a free-market monopoly "fucked up the economy." The only actual historical example of a free-market monopoly anyone has is Alcoa, which competed fiercely to make Aluminum as cheap and plentiful as it could, since Aluminum as a material was in competition with other materials if not in direct competition with other producers of Aluminum. Meanwhile, not once has anti-trust legislation helped the situation. Every time it has been used it was used against a company with already crumbling market share (Standard Oil lost half its market share in the 20 years before its first anti-trust lawsuit). Prompting a plausible accusation: antitrust laws are a weapon yielded against companies either unwilling or unable to pay protection money to Washington politicians. That's what I think happened to Standard Oil: their check bounced. Take Microsoft: in the 90s Bill Gates gave no money to anyone, and he got sued and almost lost. Well, nowadays Bill Gates gives large sums of money to nearly every foundation in Washington, no more calls from congress for antitrust hearings against Microsoft. Even if you are right that antitrust laws are necessary, do you really trust George Bush to use that power when it is necessary and not use it when it is destructive? Politicians love real monopolies, they depend on them for contributions and historically set up most of them (the Southern Pacific Railroad, the single most destructive Monopoly in U.S. history, was a government protected monopoly). What they hate are companies that don't donate to their favorite causes. Does a law really increase efficiency when its chief use is to funnel money into Political Action Committees? I think not.
12/5/2006 12:07:43 AM
12/5/2006 1:23:33 AM
12/5/2006 9:58:28 AM
12/5/2006 12:21:15 PM
12/5/2006 12:41:13 PM
bgmims is absolutely wiping the floor with you guysIt makes my head bleed to see how stupid you guys are on this subject.
12/5/2006 12:56:56 PM
12/5/2006 1:03:08 PM
to support what Lonesnark is saying
12/5/2006 1:11:14 PM
12/5/2006 1:17:30 PM
Basically Kris is advocating bigger government.Thats the only way to stop all this free trade and protect our shitty jobs.Good going you rent-seeker
12/5/2006 1:19:28 PM
I'm sorry, are you talking? Or just vomiting on your keyboard and hitting enter?
12/5/2006 1:22:21 PM
12/5/2006 1:36:05 PM
12/5/2006 2:21:31 PM
12/5/2006 2:32:41 PM
12/5/2006 3:05:14 PM
12/5/2006 3:16:03 PM
And the vice-versa is equally (I'd say more) possible. So what is your point?
12/5/2006 4:02:15 PM
You really think it's likely for the costs of managing anti-trust to go up over time?
12/5/2006 9:49:12 PM
Oh that narrow question, yes. Lawyers are not cheap and their wages have historically gone up faster than average. So, all else equal, I would expect antitrust management to go up over time. Also, the benefits (if there ever were any) are likely to continue to go down as markets continue to follow globalization.
12/5/2006 9:54:33 PM
Kris, as companies find ways to get around the laws, it gets tougher. Do drug enforcement costs go down over time?
12/5/2006 10:05:21 PM
I'm still doubting that as technology progresses, costs are going to go up.
12/6/2006 12:06:51 AM
Doubt != CertaintyThe costs of litigation alone will continue to increase the costs of fighting anti-trust cases. You do know they take those to court, right?
12/6/2006 9:36:02 AM
Don't pretend as if you have certainty on your side either, we're both speculating.
12/6/2006 3:11:32 PM
Right, but I should think in order to waste societal resources to try to stop it, it should be a burden on you to prove that it is a problem.
12/6/2006 3:17:50 PM
Since labor laws are already in place, the burden of proof is on you if you wish to change them
12/6/2006 3:22:09 PM
lol, nice, so without regard to the problems you rush in and stick up laws and then expect me to prove that the problem never actually existed.Here we go: We don't see these problems and it is impossible to tell whether that is because the laws are useful or useless. The only way to tell is to remove the laws and see the outcome.Done.
12/6/2006 3:30:22 PM